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and help me gather windfalls for jelly." "I must pack Maurice's things," Eleanor called over the banisters, doubtfully; "he's a perfect boy about packing; he put his boots in with his collars." "Oh, come along!" said Mrs. Houghton. And Eleanor yielded, scolding happily while she pinned her hat on before the mirror in the hall. In the orchard they picked up some apples, then sat down on the bleached stubble of the mowed hillside and looked over at the dark mass of the mountain, behind which a red sun was trampling waist deep through leaden clouds. "How _can_ I bring it in?" Mrs. Houghton thought; "it won't do to just throw a warning at her!" But she didn't have to throw it; Eleanor invited it. "I'm glad we're going to the hotel, just at first," she said; "Auntie says I don't know anything about keeping house, and I get worried for fear I won't make Maurice comfortable. I tell him so all the time!" "I wouldn't put things into his head, Eleanor," Mrs. Houghton said (beginning her "warning"); "I mean things that you don't want him to feel. I remember when my first baby was coming--the little boy we lost--" she stopped and bit her lip; the "baby" had been gone for nearly twenty years, but he was still her little boy--"I was very forlorn, and I couldn't do anything, or go anywhere; and Henry stayed at home with me like a saint. Well, I told my father that I had told Henry it was hard on him to 'sit at home with an invalid wife.' And father said, 'If you tell him so often enough, he'll agree with you,' There's a good deal in that, Eleanor?" "I suppose there is," Maurice's wife said, vaguely. "So, if I were you," Mrs. Houghton said, still feeling her way, "I wouldn't give him the idea that you are any--well, older than he is. A wife might be fifty years older than her husband, and if her _spirit_ was young, years wouldn't make a bit of difference!" Eleanor took this somewhat roundabout advice very well. "The only thing in the world I want," she said, simply, "is to make him happy." They went back to the house in silence. But that night Eleanor paused in putting some last things into her trunk, and, going over to Maurice, kissed his thick hair. "Maurice," she said, "are you happy?" "You bet I am!" "You haven't said so once to-day." "I haven't said I'm alive," he said, grinning. "Oh, Star, won't it be wonderful when we can go away from the whole caboodle of 'em, and just be by ourselves?" "That's wha
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